The
Jackson Amtrak station will get $1 million in renovations thanks to the
American Relief and Recovery Act (the federal stimulus program), according
to the Jackson Citizen Patriot. But Wendell
Cox, a transit consultant in St. Louis, Mo., questions why an Amtrak
station with 78 customers a day would warrant such an expense.

Cox
pointed to the Chatsworth station located in southern California about 40 miles
from the Los Angeles area as the type of facility Jackson requires. Chatsworth
gets twice as many trains and about 20,000 more passengers per year than
Jackson, but has just a platform with a shelter and a ticket vending machine.
It is unmanned. There is a building that has a museum and is also shared by a
bus company.

By
contrast, the Jackson station is staffed by 1.5 full time positions, according to Amtrak.
The average Amtrak employee living in Michigan is paid about $69,600 a year in
salary.

How
else might the federal government have spent the $1 million in station
renovation costs to help 78 people move around the region each day?

According
to listings on Cars.com, the federal government
could have used the $1 million to purchase 78 Ford Focus automobiles with less than 50,000 miles on them, and
paid $13,000 per car at most — often far less.

“Granted
the Jackson station is an attractive historic building and there should be a
market to privately redevelop it into something that can be used for a
productive purpose,” Cox wrote in an email. “The one thing it is not needed
for is trains. Ever wonder why we are on the road to Greece?”

Jackson
gets 28,506 passengers per year and six trains a day, according to Amtrak.
Chatsworth gets 49,178 passengers per year and 12 trains a day.

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Marc
Magliari, a spokesman for Amtrak, said more than 500 stations in the country
are unmanned. That includes several in Michigan, he said. For example, Royal
Oak has a platform and a shelter and is unmanned. Royal Oak services 34,306
passengers per year.

At
unmanned kiosks, passengers buy their tickets online or from a vending machine
or pay the conductors, Magliari said.

“We look at staffing issues all the time,” Magliari said.
“Overwhelmingly, the number of places we ticket you are unstaffed.”

Magliari said Amtrak is testing markets for e-ticketing and
for onboard scanning of tickets in efforts to reduce expenses.